Script-Languages-Container-Tool
Overview
The Script-Languages-Container-Tool (exaslct) is the build tool for the script language container.
You can build, export and upload script-language container from so-called flavors
which are description how to build the script language container. You can find pre-defined flavors
in the script-languages-release repository.
There we also described how you could customize these flavors to your needs.
Exasol Script Languages Container Tool
Building script-language container for extending Exasol UDFs.
In a Nutshell
Prerequisites
Note: Since version 1.0.0 the "starter scripts" shipped with previous version, which pulled the exaslct
docker container runtime, were removed. If you can't use Python3, you still can use our AI-lab which provides VM images, AMI images and a Docker images, all capable of building script-language-container.
For installation
In order to install this tool, your system needs to provide
the following prerequisites:
For running
In order to use this tool, your system needs to fulfill the following prerequisites:
-
Software
-
System Setup
- We recommend at least 50 GB free disk space on the partition
where Docker stores its images, on linux Docker typically stores
the images at /var/lib/docker.
- For the partition where the output directory (default: ./.build_output)
is located we recommend additionally at least 10 GB free disk space.
Further, prerequisites might be necessary for specific tasks. These are listed under the corresponding section.
Installation
In general, it's good practice to install the package in a virtual environment, using venv
or Poetry
.
Pip via PyPi
python3 -m pip install exasol-script-languages-container-tool
Pipx via Pypi
If you plan to use exasol-script-languages-container-tool
on the command line only via the exaslct
script, we suggest the installation via pipx
:
pipx install exasol-script-languages-container-tool
Usage
For simplicity the following examples use the script version (exaslct
), which will be installed together with the Python package. The script is just an alias for python3 -m exasol.slc.tool.main
.
How to build an existing flavor?
Create the language container and export it to the local file system
exaslct export --flavor-path=flavors/<flavor-name> --export-path <export-path>
or deploy it directly to the BucketFS (both http and https are supported)
exaslct deploy --flavor-path=flavors/<flavor-name> --bucketfs-host <hostname-or-ip> --bucketfs-port <port> \
--bucketfs-user w --bucketfs-password <password> --bucketfs-name <bucketfs-name> \
--bucket <bucket-name> --path-in-bucket <path/in/bucket> --bucketfs-use-https 1
Once it is successfully deployed, it will print the ALTER SESSION statement
that can be used to activate the script language container in the database.
How to activate a script language container in the database
If you uploaded a container manually, you can generate the language activation statement with
exaslct generate-language-activation --flavor-path=flavors/<flavor-name> --bucketfs-name <bucketfs-name> \
--bucket-name <bucket-name> --path-in-bucket <path/in/bucket> --container-name <container-name>
where <container-name> is the name of the uploaded archive without its file extension. To activate the language, execute the generated statement in your database session to activate the container for the current session or system wide.
This command will print a SQL statement to activate the language similar to the following one:
ALTER SESSION SET SCRIPT_LANGUAGES='<LANGUAGE_ALIAS>=localzmq+protobuf:///<bucketfs-name>/<bucket-name>/<path-in-bucket>/<container-name>?lang=<language>#buckets/<bucketfs-name>/<bucket-name>/<path-in-bucket>/<container-name>/exaudf/exaudfclient[_py3]';
Please, refer to the User Guide for more detailed information, how to use exalsct.
Features
- Build a script language container as docker images
- Export a script language container as an archive which can be used for extending Exasol UDFs
- Upload a script language container as an archive to the Exasol DB's BucketFS
- Generating the activation command for a script language container
- Can use Docker registries, such as Docker Hub, as a cache to avoid rebuilding image without changes
- Can push Docker images to Docker registries
- Run tests for you container against an Exasol DB (docker-db or external db)
Table of Contents
Information for Users
Information for Developers